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We are friends who love making simple food look beautiful. We hope our recipes will inspire you to get into the kitchen this season.
Aoife McElwain works in front of the camera writing the recipes and styling the food, while Mark Duggan works behind the camera to make sure it all looks as delicious as possible. We work with editors such as Killian Broderick and music supervisors like Nialler9 to make sure that our finished videos look and sound as smart as possible.
We work with brands like Glenisk and Folláin to help them create delicious video content for their online platforms.
When we're not making videos, we write a weekly column called Speedy Suppers on Thursdays in The Irish Independent. Aoife writes the recipes and styles the food while Mark takes the photographs.

12 Aug BBQ PORK BELLY

BBQ, or cooking over fire, is thought to be the world’s oldest forms of cooking. When it comes to the sauce that we slather over BBQed meats, it’s equally hard to pinpoint its origins. BBQ sauce is most associated in the Western world with the Deep South in the United States, though there is evidence that the mustard-based South Carolina barbecue sauce was brought to the New World from German settlers, hinting at the age and untraceable provenance of such sauces. Elsewhere in the world, Chinese cuisine has their hoisin sauce while South America have their asado or chimichurri sauces, which also act as a moistening agent for barbecued meats.

In this week’s recipe, we’re sharing a very simple BBQ sauce that uses ketchup as its base. We brought the BBQ indoors by cooking these porkbelly strips in the oven but they would be even more delicious cooked straight on a hot BBQ, with the same method of cooking them off first without sauce and then dousing in sauce before another grilling.

As accompaniments for BBQ pork go, it’s pretty hard to beat sweet potato fries and homemade coleslaw. I love a good sweet potato fry. Grab a couple of large sweet potatoes and slice them into strips, leaving the skins on. Put them in a roasting tray and drizzle with plenty of oil. Sprinkle generously with smoked paprika, about half a tablespoon, and mix well before roasting at about 200 degrees celsius for 30 minutes, or until cooked through and starting to caramelise.

It’s also very easy to make your own coleslaw, and is often tastier than the mayo-heavy shop-bought variety. I like using yogurt in carrot and red cabbage coleslaws, instead of cloying mayo, adding a crunch of black mustard seeds and a dash of acidic apple vinegar for flavour.

Prep Time: 15 minutes

Cooking Time: 55 minutes

Ingredients

For the porkbelly

500g porkbelly strips

Olive oil

Salt

Pepper

For the BBQ sauce

250g ketchup

125ml water

60ml apple cider vinegar

5 tablespoons light brown sugar

Pinch of fresh ground black pepper

1/2 tablespoon ground mustard powder

1 a tablespoon lemon juice

1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce

To serve

Sweet potato paprika fries

Coleslaw

Method

1. Pre-heat your oven to 220c/200c fan/gas mark 6. Begin by patting the porkbelly strips dry with kitchen paper towel. Place them in a roasting tray, and brush each strip with a little oil. Season with a good pinch of salt and pepper. Roast in the oven on the top shelf for 30 minutes.

2. Meanwhile, make your BBQ sauce by mixing together the ketchup, water, apple cider vinegar, sugar, black pepper, mustard powder, lemon juice and Worcestershire sauce. Give it a taste and adjust for more sugar or Worcestershire sauce, as you see fit. At this point, you could prepare your sweet potatoes for roasting too (see my basic recipe in my intro!).

3. Take the porkbelly strips out of the oven and cover in the BBQ sauce. You want the strips to be covered but not drowning in the sauce, so don’t use all the bbq sauce. Instead, you should hold some back to serve as a dipping sauce. Put the porkbelly back into the oven for another 25 minutes, roasting until the BBQ sauce is sticky and the pork is crispy and cooked through.

4. Serve the porkbelly strips with a bit of extra BBQ sauce on the side. Add to your table a bowl of homemade coleslaw, a platter of sweet potato fries and perhaps some corn on the cob or an assortment of other salads.

Storecupboard Essential: Ketchup

It is remarkably easy to make your own BBQ sauce using regular old ketchup as the base ingredient. There are plenty of great BBQ sauces on the market, as there are ketchups, and the better the ketchup is at your starting point, the tastier your BBQ sauce will be at the finish line. Try TMT’s artisan Irish Smoked Ketchup (www.3men.ie) made in Tipperary.

This recipe first appeared in The Irish Independent on Thursday 11th of August